It’s been a long semester, and as 2009 draws to a close, I wanted to take some time to reflect on my work this year blogging for Pocket Full of Change.
Admittedly I knew very little about poverty, hunger and homelessness before Alyssa and I started this project. I had a few tastes of the impact of these issues on the Tompkins County community from working with the United Way Stone Soup Philanthropy Corps and S.W.I.F.T. on campus last year, but I didn’t realize how pervasive the problem was or the extent to which local people were trying to combat the effects.
I hope that Alyssa and I have been able to expose some important elements about poverty in the Ithaca area and bring to light issues that our readers have maybe never considered. Poverty is a complicated concept, and there are dozens of theories on why it exists, but there will never be a simple, straightforward, easy-to-package solution. There is a limitless number of facets to poverty relief – the need for donations of food and hygiene products, the necessity of raising awareness, reconciling relief with people who may not want a hand out, and finding appropriate ways to fundraise – and we hope that our archive indicates this breadth.
We also aimed to show readers that there are solutions to this massive problem. Whether it was covering Loaves & Fishes’ “Empty Bowls” event, writing about a large-scale, United Way-backed food drive, tracking college students’ relief efforts or reflecting on our personal experiences with raising funds and awareness, I think that we covered a number of diverse ways that you can do your part to help. With everyone pitching in just a little bit – no matter how cliché or groan-worthy this sounds – we truly can combine these bursts of energy together and produce a “pocket full of change.”
I’ll be abroad during the spring semester in Buenos Aires, Argentina, but I plan to update this blog when I return to Tompkins County. Until then, happy 2010!




